By Line search: By SAMUEL GELINAS
By SAMUEL GELINAS
PLAINFIELD — Plainfield’s Annual “Rowdy” Dog Show, sponsored by the town’s Historical Society and Recreation Committee, will take place Saturday from 2-4 p.m.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
HOLYOKE — Building codes in Victorian America were antiquated, but the nationally circulated story of a fire in Holyoke is a large part of the reason why the doors of public buildings, even today, open outward, allowing people to flow out of a building and not get caught behind doors in case of an emergency.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
WORTHINGTON — To say that Officer John Scobie was appointed police chief last week may imply that he oversees a department. But that’s not exactly the case.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
WILLIAMSBURG — Beaver Brook Golf Course is officially going wild.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
HOLYOKE — Never settle when you’re rejected for a job — try again, that same job could get you called a “heroine” by the state.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
GOSHEN — Upper Highland Lake at the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) State Forest is currently closed due to elevated bacterial levels in the water. The lake will be tested again on Monday.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
CHESTERFIELD — If the hot rod hasn’t come out of the garage yet this spring, Saturday would be the day.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
NORTHAMPTON — The end of June marked the end of a more than 30-year career for someone who needs hardly any introduction to the people of Paradise City. But for those who don’t know her, Jenny Fleming-Ives, the deeply religious reproductive health specialist at Tapestry Health, is stepping out from behind her desk after 33 years in the role.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
WESTHAMPTON — Exactly 240 people came out with their lawn chairs on Saturday at the town’s library in hopes of being a part of a world record for the largest gathering of people reading in lawn chairs.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
WILLIAMSBURG — New development and the tax revenue it produces, more affordable housing options and more business: good.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
NORTHAMPTON — With millions invested in technology and staff, the hospital’s footprint growing with a new emergency department, and new education and transportation options, Cooley Dickinson Hospital’s new leader says the regional hospital is on course to offer some of the best health care services in the country.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
GOSHEN — In just a two-month period, Colleen Wilcox-Mayer has gone from being at the center of town life where she is known for her 20-plus years of work at the post office, to being driven back and forth to Boston for chemotherapy three days a week after a non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma diagnosis in May.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
CHESTERFIELD — Any synonym for the word “disaster” describes the current state of Chesterfield’s municipal buildings.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
AMHERST — Shared experiences of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) along with coffee and muffins were the breakfast mix at Bangs Community Center last Friday.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
The Cummington Cultural District is bringing a wave of summer activities, including one scheduled for this weekend.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
HOLYOKE — The governor has spoken — after more than a decade under state control, the Holyoke Public Schools will officially exit receivership beginning July 1, a move that state and city officials are touting as a “proud day” for the Paper City but that its teachers union says fails to give them the power to negotiate.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
CUMMINGTON — More than two years after Eversource cut town 20 ancient sugar maples on Brickhouse Road without the town’s knowledge, in what resident Aliza Ansell equated to a “pillage and massacre,” a new tree alliance formed in the wake of the incident recently began restoring some of the lost beauty.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
CUMMINGTON — The town has called a special Town Meeting for Thursday to consider an article that seeks, for the second time, to update a revised agreement between the seven-member communities of the Central Berkshire Regional School District.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
NORTHAMPTON — Safe Passage is just one of many organizations that rely on federal funding caught between a rock and a hard place — between going through a funding desert, or risking being penalized for misuse of federal funds.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
NORTHAMPTON — What’s the difference between nostalgia and recycling the past? It’s probably a question best answered by college sweethearts Justin Landry and Haley Kean.
By SAMUEL GELINAS
WORTHINGTON — In the words of Select Board Chair Charlie Rose, annual Town Meeting this month went “surprisingly well,” despite a looming deficit that may require a Proposition 2½ override request in the near future.
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